Tag: killer

  • I’m back to chase away killer herdsmen, says Igboho

    I’m back to chase away killer herdsmen, says Igboho

    Yoruba Nation activist, Sunday Adeyemo, alias Sunday Igboho yesterday said he was back in the country to pursue killer herdsmen from Yorubaland.

    Igboho, who went to Germany after he was released from a prison in Benin Republic where he was incarcerated at the instance of the Muhammadu Buhari led federal government on allegations of terrorism, returned to Nigeria last week.

    He made the declaration while addressing a group of people during the burial of his mother at his hometown, Igboho area of Oyo State.

    The activist who spoke in Yoruba, said the police and soldiers deployed to Yorubaland, especially in Ekiti State where monarchs were killed in broad daylight cannot combat the killers.

    He said: “I want you all to stand with me so that we can liberate ourselves from the herders encroaching on our lands. Let us mount security in all the Yoruba lands ourselves, if not, they will take our lands.

    “We don’t have to wait for the government or anyone. Let’s just work in unison. We cannot farm on our lands because of these herders.

    Read Also: Be patient with us, Speaker Abbas appeals to Nigerians

    “And our people are going hungry and angry. We don’t need the soldiers the government claims to have deployed to Ekiti State. We work following our elders and mount the places ourselves.

    “It was my mother that was my fear before but now she’s gone, I have nothing to be scared of again. I am now back to take back our land.”

    While refuting claims that he was working for politicians, Igboho queried if he could be working for politicians and if they would still want him dead.

    He said: “I am not working for any politician. In fact, if I incidentally slapped someone, the government would be ready to arrest me and put me behind bars.

    “I know they are watching me closely now to know my next action but I’m ready to take a step to stop these marauders’ activities in our lands.”

  • Suspected killer of Black Lives Matter activist sentenced to life in prison

    Suspected killer of Black Lives Matter activist sentenced to life in prison

    Leon County Judge Frank Allman has sentenced a suspected killer Aaron Glee to life in prison for the tragic and horrific 2020 murder of a community college student and a retired state worker.

    The Nation reports Salau, a Tallahassee community college student who participated in Black Lives Matter protests, went missing just days before Sims, a community volunteer who had worked for several state agencies before retirement, did.

    Glee reportedly tied Salau up and imprisoned her for several days. He admitted to sexually assaulting her numerous times before deciding to kill her.

    Later, Glee raided Sims’ home and kidnapped her too.

    Read Also: Probe report will expose rot in CBN, says Fed Govt

    Police found the women at Glee’s disheveled home after tracing Sims’ phone.

    Sims’ body was found inside a bedroom under a bloody sheet; Salau’s body was found under a pile of leaves in the woods behind his house.

    Glee, 52, was set to plead guilty in January but announced he wanted to have a trial.

    He later pleaded guilty in June to first-degree murder and kidnapping, agreeing to a life behind bars without prosecutors pursuing the death penalty.

    Judge Allman sentenced the suspect to two consecutive life sentences for two counts of murder in the first degree.

    He was also sentenced to another life sentence for one count of kidnapping, 15 years in prison for one count of sexual battery, and an additional five years for felony battery, court records show.

  • ‘Killer’ of Nigeria diplomat held in Sudan

    The Sudanese authorities Saturday announced the arrest of a woman accused of killing an Immigration Attaché at the Nigerian embassy in Khartoum.

    The Consular officer, Habibu Almu, was found stabbed to death at his home in the Sudanese capital city of Khartoum on Thursday.

    In a short statement, the official news agency, SUNA, said the Sudanese police “arrested the offender, a foreign woman who committed the crime”. It further said she confessed the murder of the Nigerian official and the stolen possessions.

    The Nigerian government condemned the assassination of its national immigration officer in Khartoum and said they would work with Khartoum to arrest the culprit.

    The Sudanese authorities didn’t disclose the circumstances of the crime or the nationality of the killer.

  • Al-Makura to Ortom: killer herdsmen not in Nasarawa

    Al-Makura to Ortom: killer herdsmen not in Nasarawa

    Nasarawa State Governor Tanko Al-Makura yesterday denied that killer-herdsmen causing havoc in Benue State are in the state.

    Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom, whose state has lost 71 persons to the rampaging gunmen said they were residing in Nasarawa State.

    After meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa yesterday, Ortom spoke about the anti-open grazing law, saying it had brought peace, until the herdsmen attacks.

    “And since we started the implementation, there has been relative peace among farmers and herdsmen; they were doing well until this militia coming from this Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, came and attacked us. And they are known, we know where they are. As I talk to you they are in Tongua in Awe local government that is where these people are camped and coming to attack people.” he added

    But Al-Makura swiftly denied the allegation, saying his state was not harbouring the killer-herdsmen.

    He said: “I’m really taken aback; this statement is most unfortunate. I will like to use this opportunity to say that there is nothing like that whatsoever. If anything, the Tonga that the governor is talking about in Awe Local Government  is now the safe haven for displaced persons.

    “As I speak with you today, there are more than three IDP camps in Awe local government that quarters and caters for the number of people that have migrated from Benue to Nasarawa.

    “To be specific, they are more than 7,000 people that are camped in Tonga. So it’s very ironical that a place that is supposed to be an area that has become a safe haven for IDPs can now be called where militias are camped.

    “In that case, the militia don’t need to go as far as Benue. They have the prey within the vicinity of Tonga to attack. I think this is most unfortunate.” he said

    He added: “Yesterday, we held over seven hours of rigorous interfacing with seven governors, service chiefs and some ministers and all our security operatives within the states and around Benue, and my colleague could not tell me this, he could not approach me and give me an idea if there is anything that he saw or is worried about.

    “Besides, from all the discussions we had yesterday, there was no concrete security report stigmatising any part of Nasarawa State as habouring people that are coming to attack Benue.

    “I feel what should be of concern to us as leaders is the plight of the people and any of such statement that is inflammatory is likely going to cause more confusion to what is already there.

    “As it is, it is the implementation of the anti-grazing law in Benue that has caused the problem and now Nasarawa State is being infected by the problem notwithstanding that we are being our brothers’ keepers and good neigbhours.

    “I had to cut short my leave and come to find ways of helping my colleague. We have called all our security to meet to find ways and means of helping Benue and if all efforts we have done and with all the relief materials we have given and the protection to the IDPs that were created, that certain parts of Nasarawa State can now be stigmatised with this allegations is to say the least  most unfortunate.”

    Al-Makura added: “We will still continue to render whatever assistance that we can give to the IDPs from Benue because we have some Tiv people that live in Nasarawa in virtually all the three or four local governments that share boundary with Benue State, we are duty bound as a responsible administration to cater for all.

    “And the Tonga he is talking about is a town within three states, that is Goa in Benue, Shanda, Ibi and there is River Benue besides them. So, anybody can fly through the River to go and attack in Benue. And don’t forget the obscurity of the wilderness and is very porous and anybody can move from any part to any place to attack any place.

    “So, as far as I am concerned, it is unfortunate there is nobody keeping anybody anywhere in Nasarawa State.”

  • Chinese worker’s killer not my employee, says Lagos firm owner

    Chinese worker’s killer not my employee, says Lagos firm owner

    The killer of the Assistant Manager in the Greenworld Multilevel Marketing Company, Alice Xu was not staff of the company, the Chairman, Uzoukwu Frances Ngozi has said.

    Alice Xu who until his death was in charge of the Organic Fertilizer section of the company, Uzoukwu said was killed by one Ikechukwu Amos.

    She told The Nation in Lagos that Ikechukwu Amos was a friend to one Joseph Oshope who was the store keeper and employee of the company.

    According to her, Alice Xu was brutally murdered on the 16th of June, 2017 in the company premises adding the murder case is already in the police.

    The story was first published in a national newspaper (not The Nation) on June 19, wherein it was said that XU’s killer was an employee of the firm.

     She revealed that the said Ikechukwu Amos was not staff of the company but a friend to the store keeper who was accommodating him in the company’s boys’ quarter without the knowledge of management of the company.

    Uzoukwu disclosed that ‘’the store keeper who has been in the employ of the company for over five years, at a time had accommodation problem and he approached the company for help and the company in its generosity gave him accommodation in the boys’ quarter.

    ‘’There are two Chinese and five local staff in the company, two security men, a store keeper, sales girl and a cleaner, there is no way somebody can be working in the company and the management won’t know the person.

    “I don’t know about it, the Chinese people here don’t even know, a lot of distributors come here on daily basis. This is a very big mansion (about 12 bedroom mansion) we have one section of it where we have the Chinese, there is a place where they stay (Chinese house) in this Ikeja but when they have a lot of work to do they can spend a night doing it.

    According to her, the company has time limit for its work, because distributors earn bonuses at the end of every month and that day was actually the last day to gather all the sales in Nigeria and send the hard copy to China.

    “So she had so much work to do on that particular day and she had no other choice than to stay back, her colleague was on leave and she was just doing her work, and the security man Hassan Ahmed, took permission to go and pray as they were doing their Ramadan fasting, as that was their last day of prayer; so Ahmed the security man was out and that was how her killer cut her unawares”, she submitted.

    She said: “On that particular day we were all happily together but to my greatest surprise I got a call around 9pm that something terrible had happened in the company”

    “And When I rushed to the company the police at the Man Centre which is the closest police station around this area had already taken her body and when I got to the police and they showed me the killer I could not recognise him because I don’t know him, and I asked who are you, the police and everybody there were looking at me, they asked if he is my staff and I said no, he is not my staff”, she added.

  • Malnutrition: A silent child killer

    Malnutrition: A silent child killer

    Consider these statistics: every year Nigeria loses 2,300 children under five years of age to child killer diseases; in a year 145 women of childbearing age also die. Out of the children’s casualty figure, 500 die of malnutrition. A survey is also said to show that two out of five Nigerian children are stunted, while almost 30 per cent are underweight. Again, blame it on malnutrition.

    This is of great concern to medical authorities. Malnutrition is gradually becoming a silent killer of children, apart from harming them in other ways.

    The Niger State Nutrition Officer, Mrs. Amina Isah giving the nutritional status of children in the state during a capacity-building workshop organised by the Civil Society Scaling-Up Nutrition in Nigeria (CS-SUNN), said 409,993 children in the state are stunted, 65,815 children are wasted while 186,655 children are underweight, adding that in the last three months, 9,040 children have been diagnosed to be suffering from acute malnutrition.

    She expressed concern that Niger State has moved from medium burden to high burden state which has placed it as a priority state for nutrition intervention in Nigeria.

    Malnutrition is said to be a condition when the right amount and type of food including nutrients are not consumed. A lot of children suffer from malnutrition these days which results to stunted growth, wasting and being underweight.

    Nigeria has been rated as the country with one of the highest burdens of malnutrition in Africa and globally. One of the reasons for malnutrition can be the fact that only 17 per cent of infants are exclusively breastfed for the first six months while 70 per cent of children aged six to 23 months are not receiving the minimum acceptable diet.

    Proffering the way forward, Isah said that the state can stop malnutrition if the government and relevant health partners adopt a comprehensive costed state multi-sectoral nutrition strategic action plan, ensure adequate funding,  comprehensive response treatment and prevention programmes.

    The Project Director of the Civil Society Scaling-Up Nutrition in Nigeria (CS-SUNN), Mrs. Beatrice Eluaka said that stunting is now a global indicator for measuring country’s development adding that Nigeria’s indicator is not encouraging; she said that the percentage of children malnourished in the country have not been stable over the last decade.

    She said that for the nation to adequately address malnutrition, there is the need for the implementation of the National Strategic Plan of Action for Nutrition (NSPAN) adding that NSPAN would save 123,000 lives yearly and avert 890,000 stunting in children under five years if implemented.

    Eluaka said that $912 million is needed to operationalize the National Strategic Plan Action for Nutrition (NSPAN) by the federal government stressing on the importance for government to ensure the implementation of the document which should have been in operation since 2014.

    Commending the Federal and state governments for improving on the allocation to the health sector, she said that the only solution to nutritional problems in the nation is for the government to implement, fund the roadmap already designed and create more provisions for the child and family health needs of the people.

  • Police nab suspected killer of chief imam

    Men of the Edo State Police Command have arrested the suspected killer of the Chief Imam of Egbeta Mosque in Ovia North East Local Government, Mallam Saka Afolabi.

    He was killed on March 4 in the presence of his three children by three gunmen while on his way to farm.

    The suspected killer is Ajetena Adebayo Moruf.

    Parading the suspect yesterday, Police Commissioner Haliru Gwandu said: “We combed five states before the suspect was arrested.”

    He said two other suspects were at large.

    Gwandu urged criminals to change.

    He said: “The principal suspect in the killing of the chief imam of Egbeta Mosque has been arrested. Three people killed the cleric. Others are on the run. The deceased’s sons witnessed the killing.

    “After the incident, the suspect went into hiding. We combed more than five states before we nabbed him. We trailed him to Shagamu in Ogun State.”

    The deceased’s son, Wahid, said his father and farmers had a dispute with the suspect since 2014.

    He alleged he saw the suspect and two others with guns on a motorcycle on his way to farm.

    Wahid said his three brothers, who were with their father at the time of the killing, ran away.

    The suspect, however, denied involvement in the killing of the chief imam.

    He urged the police to check his call logs to determine where he was on the day of the killing.

  • Killer palm oil floods markets

    Killer palm oil floods markets

    Gboyega Alaka chronicles the growing presence of adulterated palm oil in the Nigerian market and the dangers they portend for unsuspecting consumers

    You must have seen them. Or perhaps tasted of them, albeit unwittingly. Adulterated palm oil or killer palm oil as some people have come to term them. They are everywhere in the Nigerian market. For the not-too discerning buyer, these set of oils even get the nod ahead of the pure unadulterated palm oil on the shelves because they come across as more alluring. What are the tell-tales? Redness; they are unusually red and attractive, while some are almost impossible to differentiate.

    From Ikotun market in Lagos to Jankara, to Mushin, Ajegunle, in Lagos, Ibadan and as far as Potiskum in Jos, the story is the same. Nigerians go to the market with the intention of buying palm oil to cook their meals but end up with poison. Yes, consumers do not die immediately, but that does not make it less poisonous; or how does one describe inedible substances and chemicals deliberatly mixed with food ingredients and sold to innocent people?

    Palm oil ordinarily enjoys a universal acceptance amongst all Nigerian tribes, to the extent that no home-made meal is complete without it (or vegetable oil).

    Palm oil in Nigeria is derived mainly from African oil palm (Elaeis guineensis), popularly referred to as Palm Tree.  It is naturally a reddish-orange colour because it has very high beta-carotene content. It is richly endowed with so many health and nutritional benefits. According to Organicfacts.com, an online health journal, the health benefits of palm oil include improving energy levels, preventing cancer, boosting the immune system, helping to prevent aging, protecting against heart diseases and also beneficial to pregnant women. More recently, it has become more popular because of the risk of bad cholesterol associated with other cooking oil. Aside energy, its beta-carotene content also boosts hormonal balance in the body, and enhances vision. The source also states that it prevents macular degeneration and cataracts, thereby enhancing sight.

    This is why this habit of adulterating the oil is attracting so much attention. “What else do we turn to?” Morayo, a housewife around Mushin area of Lagos, asked this reporter almost rhetorically, during one of his fact-finding mission. Palm oil also has high level of HDL, good cholesterol, which helps to maintain a good balance of cholesterol in the body and by implication, ensure a healthier cardiovascular system. It’s rich in Tocopherols , a type of vitamin A antioxidants, that also help to prevent cancer by neutralising free radicals, which experts say cause healthy cells to mutate into cancerous cells.

    It is therefore unfortunate that this rather healthy gift of nature is gradually being bastardised to the extent that man now needs to be more alert when buying and consuming it or products for which it serves as a component.

    Adulterated palm oil everwhere

    At Ikotun Market, arguably one of the biggest markets in Lagos, an elderly woman, Mrs Saratu (not real name), who deals in yam and other farm stuff in the market, spoke of how adulterated palm oil has taken over the market. “Adulterated palm oil is what we have in the market right now. I mistakenly bought it sometime ago and regretted it. It is adulterated with chemicals and colouring. I got to know the secret when one of the sellers operated close to me, before she closed down due to debt incurred from a microfinance bank.”

    Asked if there is a marked difference between the pure oil and the adulterated one, Mrs Saratu said, “It is attractive when you behold it in a bottle, but when you cook with it, the chemical with which it had been mixed will not allow you to enjoy the soup. Apart from showing in the colour, which makes the soup as red as blood, the chemical does not allow you to enjoy the soup, as it mars the taste and makes it nauseating. And that is aside whatever health danger the chemical may carry. And as for me, anything that will harm my body, I have sworn not to take, except if I don’t know.”

    Continuing, she said: “I wonder why they are not just selling the oil pure, even if it is more expensive, at least, people will eat and remain healthy. And it is not as if the mixed one is cheaper. I think it is mainly because the chemical and colouring make the oil red and more attractive. Please, help us tell the government to look into it before these greedy traders kill us all. They don’t seem to care about the risk they are putting the people through. All they are interested in is the money they are making.”

    Asked how she gets her supply now, or if she now has a way of detecting the adulterated type, Mrs. Saratu said she now buys from source in Edo State, since it is not so easy to determine which has been mixed. “I give money to my contacts who supply me yam in Edo and other states to help me buy pure unadulterated palm oil from source, and this is what I take with my family and sales people who live with me. I buy in gallons, but how many people can do that?”

    Another woman, Lara, a journalist in Lagos, said the situation is horrible and dangerous to healthy living. Her experience: “I bought it once and it was really appalling. The odour that greeted me the moment I got home was really offensive. Aside that, there were so many dirt and particles; most of them blackish. It was so bad that I just closed the lid and went out to buy another oil. I couldn’t cook with it. I think one of the reasons I fell for it was because I did not taste it. Usually, I taste my oil before buying. “

    Since then, Lara said she has been more careful, taking time to always taste the oil and stick to one customer, whom she can trust and who has so far never failed her.

    Unlike Mrs. Saratu, Lara said the one she bought was not attractive. “It had the same reddish-orange colour but was clearly adulterated. And it was not as if it was cheaper. As a matter of fact, they even make it look more expensive by giving it a higher price tag. That was last December, but after that, I have been extremely careful, making sure I only buy from one customer, whom I trust.,” she said.

    Yetunde, another journalist, also recounted how her experience made her stop buying palm oil in Lagos. Last year, she said her sister bought a 250 litre palm oil, which they both shared. “Initially,” she said, “the content looked really good. Even when we started using it, it tasted really nice. However, by the time we used it halfway, we discovered that the colour and taste were changing. The content in the gallon had become thick and black. It was then that it dawned on me that the palm oil was adulterated. We stopped using it immediately.”

    So now, she buys her palm oil only outside Lagos. “Each time my sister or anyone is travelling out of Lagos, I ask them to help me buy from source, to avoid making the same mistake.” She would not allow some bad people to poison her and her family in their greed.

    Barakat, a housewife and businesswoman, also condemned the adulterated palm oil, which she said may be the cause of the numerous cases of cancer now afflicting the country. A 41-year-old woman, she said in her younger days, cancer was virtually unheard of and wondered why some people, would, for the sake of making money, be poisoning their countrymen and women. To underline her angst over the adulterated oil, Barakat told this reporter of how she has taken it upon herself to enlighten as many people as she knows and come across, never to buy the palm oil. She does not know exactly what chemicals it is adulterated with, but vows that they cannot be edible stuffs. She also wonders what NAFDAC is doing about it.

    It is from Cotonou – Head, Ikotun palm oil sellers

    One of the wholesale dealers in Ikotun Market, who gave his name as John, would not divulge any information. He denied knowing about adulterated palm oil and would not tell where he sources his supply from, save an umbrella statement that: “My oga buys it from the East.”

    Attempts at getting information from the retailers also met with denials and rebuffs.

    Ifeanyi, a bulky elderly man, is the head of palm oil retailers in Ikotun Market, Lagos. In an attempt to unravel the riddle behind the unwholesome practice and ask if anything is being done to stem the situation, this reporter sought  his opinion.

    He admitted that he is aware of the adulterated palm oil, but said it is the ones brought to Nigeria from Cotonou via Idiroko border that are adulterated. On his own, he said he does not mix his oil and that he sells it as it is delivered from the producers.

    When asked what the perpetrators use to mix the oil, he said he did not know. When this reporter told him about his finding that the dealers mix the oil with bad cholesterol vegetable oil, colouring and other chemicals, he said he was not aware.

    And on the effort his association is making to stem the practice, Ifeanyi said the association tries its best, but insisted that it is a difficult situation, as it is hard to catch the perpetrators in the act. On some occasions, he confessed that they have had to fight some of those involved in the practice and admitted almost helplessly that “they just seem unwilling to desist.”

    As for him, Ifeanyi said he sells original, unadulterated palm oil, but disclosed that even the consumers/buyers make things difficult, as they always ask for the adulterated ones, albeit unknowingly, because of its ‘rich’ colour and attractiveness. “And you know that in business, demand drives supply. So the sellers try to meet up with demand.,” He said.

    ‘They’re all culpable’

    Mrs Saratu on sighting this reporter with the head of the palm oil sellers association, however, vowed that even he is into the unwholesome practice. She expressed surprise that even Ifeanyi was the head of the oil; sellers and said that is a sign that ‘we’re all in trouble.’

    When asked if she ever sighted NAFDAC officials cracking down on the adulterated oil sellers, Mrs. Saratu said she had no idea.

    Nowhere is safe

    For those taking solace in buying the products from outside Lagos, it might not yet be uhuru, as some unscrupulous elements are even said to be engaged in the dangerous habit. Sometime last year, the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NCDSC) arrested some suppliers in Potiskum, Jos, for allegedly adulterating the product with dye. Their arrests at the time led to the confiscation of several other samples, which after lab tests by NAFDAC, showed traces of high acid, high saponification and high relative density.

    Lawal Musa Dadingelma, the state’s coordinator of NAFDAC, confirmed that the adulterated palm oil samples tested contained dye which is capable of causing cancer when deposited in human body. And these were just a tip of the iceberg of people who might be engaged in the nefarious activity. The Medical Director of Sani Abacha Specialist Hospital, Damaturu, Dr. Garba Fika, was also quoted by a national daily to have confirmed an increase in the number of cancer cases. Ditto, several other hospitals in the country. Even the ministry of health has confirmed this.

    Last year, Francis Durosinmi-Etti, a professor of Oncology and Radiotherapy at the College of Medicine, University of Lagos, disclosed that 500,000 new cases are diagnosed yearly in the country. Speaking at his inaugural lecture, titled, “That We May Overcome Cancer: The Odyssey of a Radiation Oncologist” in Lagos, cited lack of basic infrastructure and late report by patients, as reasons. But with the spread in these ‘evil’ palm oil, the professor might have overlooked one major factor, albeit unwittingly.

    Dr Abubakar Jimoh, Director, Special Duties at  NAFDAC, confirmed that the trend is not new and that the agency is aware of the dangerous practice. Even as far back as ten years ago, when it first got wind of the trend, he said the agency, under the late Prof Dora Akunyili, waged a ceaseless battle against the perpetrators in the markets. “We also made it a point to educate the public about the presence of the product and sensitise them. We discovered a particular colourant, with which they mixed the oil to make it more attractive and get people to buy.”

    During a lab test, Jimoh said they discovered that the palm oil is mixed with of Azo dye. “Azo dye is a dye used in dying clothes and is not to be consumed because it is highly carcinogenic, which means it can cause cancer. It is the major colourant used but it is dangerous enough.”

    He said the first challenge the agency faced back then was whether to dabble into it or not, since it especially didn’t fall into its purview. “We were torn between cracking down on it and being passive, because it does not really fall under the purview of NAFDAC. NAFDAC, based on law, is concerned with processed food. But it got to a point, where we decided that we had to think outside the box. For the sake of the people, we had to redefine our role and commenced a public enlightenment process to get people aware. Market women particularly.”

    He confessed though that the agency has not sustained the battle, especially because it has had to do battle on so many fronts. “There are so many issues, including fake/counterfeit drugs that is still daunting, not to talk of other processed foods. There is also the issue of bringing the quality of export agricultural products to par with standards. “

    He concluded that what the agency needs still is “a lot of public enlightenment. If people are aware, then they will not fall prey. Another thing we’re planning is to begin to make people scapegoats. So far we have been restraining ourselves from literally taking over the role of the police, so to speak.”

    He admits that the agency would eventually resort to cracking down, but said for now, it aiming to get Nigerians to take their destinies in their hands and try to be vigilant and careful. I can tell you that the local market women have very discernible eyes to detect such adulterated product. “By just looking and tasting, they are able to decipher and differentiate. It is called organoleptic test. Even scientists do organoleptic tests to eliminate products before embarking on tests. That is the first natural test, before any lab tests.”

    Jimoh, however, said the agency’s Food Nutrition and Applied Nutrition Department recently disclosed to him that it is part of their plan to carry out a nationwide survey. “That survey will help us take samples from markets and suppliers across the country to see what new tricks or addition they’ve brought on aside azo dye. The survey would also aim to gauge how impactful our enlightenment campaigns have been on the market habits of the consumers. It is after that we will take more actions, such as raids. The only raids we have done in the past were on vegetable oil.”

    Adulterated palm oil can cause cancer – Chemist

    Life MarchDr Abayomi Akeem of Environmental and Analytical Chemistry Research Group,  University of Lagos, expresses his dismay on adulterated palm oil in the market and warns that it can cause cancer and other health complications.

    What are the dangers in consuming such palm oil?

    As in all adulterated foods, impacts on health could range from a mild discomfort to serious long term effects such as cancer and organ impairment, depending on the chemical composition of the additive used in the food. There have been reports of gastrointestinal issues from people who allegedly consumed foods prepared with adulterated palm oil.

    Have you seen these adulterated palm oils or done any analysis?

    I have not seen adulterated palm oil or perhaps I have had no intuitive need to look out for such. That is not say I might not have seen one unknowingly on the supermarket shelves. I always try to avoid smartly packaged palm oil, since it is one item that is still amply produced locally. I believe the rural dwellers are likely no to have access to these chemicals, which in all likelihood do not come cheaply. Thus, when buying palm oil for use, I buy from source. I have not carried out any analysis on palm oil especially with respect to this emerging concern but it will be interesting to quickly do so in order to have a scientifically provable fact to the insinuation.

    There have been fears about the chemicals being carcinogenic, what is your opinion on this?

    As to the chemicals being used, unconfirmed reports indicates they are dyes, presumably to enhance the red hue of the oil. If this is true, consuming artificially formulated dyes or pigments could be poisonous, depending on the composition of the dye. Some dye are formulated using colourful and often toxic metals, which could bioaccumulate in the body and damage its physiology, while other dyes are azo dyes which have allergenic, carcinogenic, mutagenic, and teratogenic effects on humans. If the presence of any of these dyes is confirmed to be present in the oil, then this must be taken as an emergency by the regulatory bodies.

    There have been fears that these adulterated palm oils may be responsible for the rise in cancer cases; what do you think?

    This may not be a definitive statement, as there is presently no peer reviewed publication to this effect to my knowledge. However, the newly acquired knack of Nigerians to go for processed, packaged and often colourful foods is obviously doing more damage to our health, thus the increasing incidences of these terrible ailments. So, it is not only in palm oil that one may be exposed to cancer, other foods and condiments, in addition to our rapidly deteriorating urban environment, may also serve as exposure route for these ailments. The concern is that most of these foods find their ways onto our supermarket shelves without the necessary certification by NAFDAC.

    A particular consumer said the one she bought had repulsive odour and filled with blackish particles.

    If this is proven to be true, then samples must be obtained and adequately tested to determine the constituent. The repulsive odour may be due to the presence of the dye. Dyes, especially the azo types, smell awfully. The presence of particles as an indication of artificial additives may not be conclusive, as wholly natural palm oil may still contain particles if not refined properly.

    The adulterated oil seems to be everywhere; this probably casts a question mark on the efficiency of NAFDAC, what do you think? What do you think can be done to exterminate these dangerous products in the market?

    The problem is that products get into the market faster than NAFDAC could effectively monitor. Nigerians can also assist by reporting suspicions of such food items to the regulatory bodies for prompt action. I will encourage consumers to move as close as possible to the base of the production chain when buying food items, especially those that are still produced locally. In other words, patronise the traders who bring in fresh produce from the hinterland rather than looking for attractively packaged food items on the shelves. In so doing, the probability of buying adulterated items might be reduced. Also, as there is virtually no household in Nigeria which does not consume palm oil, the item must be listed as a priority food which requires regular sampling, by NAFDAC, from the local markets and departmental stores to determine their constituents.

  • AMCON: Killer or restorer of  businesses? II

    AMCON: Killer or restorer of businesses? II

    The Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) means different  things to business owners. To banks, where the corporation bought over 13, 000 bad loans worth of N5.6 trillion, it is a restorer of hope. But, to recalcitrant debtors, whose bad loans were purchased, AMCON is a nightmare and a killer-pill. However, the corporation insists its mission is not to kill but to revive businesses  and make them irresistible to new investors, writes COLLINS NWEZE.

    So, selling is difficult because the economy is challenged. The time of recession is not the right time to sell because when you sell, you may not get the value of your assets,” he disclosed.
    The AMCON said it has plans to sell its majority stake in Peugeot Automobile Nigeria (PAN) Limited, a local joint venture with the major French automaker. Bids are being invited from investors.
    Peugeot Citroen is the technical partner to the Nigerian assembly plant, which has capacity to assemble 240 cars a day, PAN said on its website.
    The AMCON said it owned 79.3 per cent of PAN Nigeria Limited, having acquired the stake five years ago after purchasing the company’s debt and taking some as equity. PAN Nigeria Limited was set up in 1972 as a joint venture between the Federal Government and France’s Peugeot, with an annual production of 90,000 cars by the 1980s.
    But operations nosedived and the company accumulated bad loans shortly after the government sold its stake via a privatisation to core indgenous investors in 2006.
    On Multi-Trex, Nwauzor said: “If you go to Multi-Trex today, you will weep because of the bad management of the company. The place was mismanged. A Nigerian takes a loan and the first thing he does is to buy big cars. The cash for the cars is supposed to come from your profit and not taken out from the borrowed funds. Also, in the banking industry, insider loan dealing is a big problem because branch managers sometimes get five per cent of the loans. A lot of the loans went bad from day one because of insider dealings”.
    According to him, the corporation took over some of the companies as dead entities, hence the need to shop for strategic investors with long-term interest.
    He said: “AMCON did not go to Multi-Trex and say they wanted to take over. It was the loan the company borroed from a bank that AMCON bought. Now, we are trying to get the right investors and right management to run the place. No matter how much investment you make, if you do not have the right people to run the businesses, you will end up not making progress.”
    Nwauzor confirmed Tinapa Resort as the investment of Cross River State under the administration of former Governor Donald Duke, noting that Governor Ben Ayade has shown interest to ensure that the business run successfully.
    His words: “The idea was to recreate a mini Dubai in that place. We also want to see how we can attract the right investors. Some of the assets there are at the level of investment that you keep maintaining so that when an investor comes, he will not meet rotten assets. That is why Nigerians should appreciate what AMCON is doing.
    “We appoint receiver-managers to oversee any asset that we take over. We make sure it is working. There are machines you need to grease everyday. So, the assets you want to sell must be in good order. We must provide police security, and keep the companies working. If you notice, at the middle of last year, we appointed Asset Management Partners to go after loans of N100 million and below. They are working tremendously. We then face the big ticket assets to tidy up before our time is up.”
    The oil and gas industry, he said, is facing huge challenges. “The two oil rigs with us are not producing but we have to maintain them. But the cost of maintaining the rigs is heavy and if you do not maintain the rigs, they will go bad. The money are with Nigerians still doing businesses in other names but have refused to pay,” he said.
    He said that last year, the Federal Government set up inter-agency committee on AMCON to help debt recovery. The idea was to round the debtors up and ensure they do not escape. The idea is to zero in on recalcitrant debtors.
    “For SilverBird Group, the receiver manager is there and managing the place. AMCON does not want to kill any business. If you take over SilverBird Group and shut it down, the unemployment level will rise. If we revive the companies, millions of jobs will be created. You cannot sell Aero Contractors and make that money, but if you run it for five years or more, you will make your money,” he stated.
    The Chairman of Senate Committee on Banking, Insurance and other Financial Institutions, Senator Rafiu Ibrahim, said that plans are underway in the Senate to strengthen AMCON’s debt recovery capacity.
    Speaking on the theme: “Economic Rebuilding through Eligible Assets Recovery”, the committee cahir that time would soon run out on bad debtors to AMCON.
    Ibrahim praised the new debt recovery drive by the corporation, adding that the legislators remain committed to help in the stabilisation of the economy.
    He, however, noted that his committee must collaborated with key government agencies like AMCON, which carries a huge burden on behalf of the Federal Government to achieve the set objective.
    Ibrahim said the Senate will no longer fold its arm and watch the economy destroyed by a few individuals indebted to the corporation to the tune of billions of naira.
    “We can all attest to the renewed drive towards a more focused and enhanced assets recovery and the management approach under the new dispensation as evidenced by AMCON’s strides in recovering eligible assets from debtors. This underscores the corporation’s importance in the nation’s economic rebuilding effort. AMCON, since its establishment, has been a key stabilising and revitalising force in the Nigerian financial system and requires vital support from the legislature to achieve its statutory objectives,” he said.

    AMCON’s leadership

    After Kuru’s appointment as AMCON chief on August, 2015, succeeding Mustapha Chike-Obi as its pioneer Chief Executive Officer (CEO), he promised transparency in the sale of acquired assets and insisted on organising conducting open and competitive bidding processes.
    “If you recall, what used to happen in AMCON was private disposal of assets. We have changed the whole policy. There is no longer private disposal of assets in AMCON. So, there will be no hanky-panky or secret deals in the disposal of our assets,” he promised.
    Currently, a lot of specialised assets are waiting to be disposed, but disposing them at the prices they were bought is already a big challenge for the corporation. But many times, the assets could be re-valued based on discretion.
    With the price of crude oil falling below $60 per barrel, AMCON’s ability to meet its debt obligations has also worsened. The drop in oil prices has reduced government’s ability to honour even its own commitment to some of the AMCON’s papers or bond holders. Secondly, because of the low prices of crude oil has affected turnaround in the economy, the economic activity of some of the businesses indebted to AMCON has been been weakened and its ability to repay challenged.
    Besides, the impairment of assets is also affecting the prices of the assets that the corporation is holding. If we have an oil tank farm that was worth $50.1 billion a year ago, and one wants to buy it today, obviously it reflects the price of crude today.
    Before AMCON was created, NPLs (Non-Performing Loans) rates were over 35 per cent, but today, they have fallen below 13 per cent after the corporation bought over 13,000 bad debts from banks. The poor NPLs rates were caused by insider-loan abuses and poor structured loans, among other factors.
    The corporation has not only stopped further purchase of bad loans. It is trying to change its strategy from proving financial stability to recovering bad loans and consolidating its financial obligations.
    Kuru believes that AMCON’s primary responsibility is not to take over businesses of debtors, but to support them.
    He said: “If you see AMCON taking over any business, that means there is a problem with that business. Quite a lot of companies are operating but operating at a loss and you cannot continue to operate at a loss when you have obligations and cannot meet the such obligations then we will be forced to act.”
    Kuru has urged strategic investors with long term interest in the economy that the right time to invest in the country is now, despite the slight challenges.
    Kuru said: “AMCON is inundated with proposals from different investors with differs interests in the economy. Nigeria remains a growing and promising economy as far as investment opportunities are concerned but, it has to be for businesses and business owners that have long-term interest in Nigeria.
    “Any investor without these characteristics may be overwhelmed as a result of the present situation of the economy, which is temporary to say the least. So, as far as I am concerned, the present economic challenge is actually the right time to invest in Nigeria; a time to lay a solid foundation and then grow with the economy in no distant time.”
    According to him, AMCON will continue to sustain its tempo of recoveries, which began last year by strategically focusing on value enhanced exits of its portfolios, which encompasses continued negotiations and resolution of loans through cash recoveries, asset forfeitures through negotiation or enforcement; capital restructuring for short to mid-term exits as well as joint venture arrangements for asset operations and land development.
    He assured that AMCON will also explore the creation of a robust Real Estate Investment Trust Scheme (REITS) to provide a market-driven exit for AMCON’s real estate assets as well as additional capital market instruments for institutional investors such as the Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) and other interested parties. With these opportunities, Kuru said AMCON has a bouquet of attractive assets for different investors – locally and internationally.
    Speaking at a three-day retreat organised by the Senate Committee on Banking, Insurance and other Financial Institutions in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, Kuru said the corporation needs the support and partnership of the Senate given the high level of frustration it was getting from the debtors.
    He said: “After more than six years of operation, all efforts to recover the loans diligently have failed. We now have to resort to the Act setting up AMCON by resorting to the courts. Let me be quick to add here that AMCON is not trying to unduly prejudice the views or positions of stakeholders, especially the judiciary,” he stated.
    “AMCON remains a law abiding organisation with respect for the rule of law. However, our campaign is intended to draw attention to the enormity of the challenges and potential threats, which the bad loans in our portfolio pose to the wider economy and the common man. We are mindful of time as AMCON has a very short lifespan. Our sunset date of 2023 is drawing nearer each day. In fact, other similar institutions around the world, like Malaysia have wound up their recovery vehicles. They are now focused on managing or turning around the assets taken over during the recovery phase”.
    By 2023, AMCON will cease to exist in line with the 10-year mandate given to it by the Act establishing it. However, the challenge is who will inherit the corporation’s unresolved assets if the corporation failed to achieve its mandate of resuscitating ailing businesses? These and many more are puzzles that only time will solve.

  • AMCON :  Killer or  restorer of businesses? (I)

    AMCON : Killer or restorer of businesses? (I)

    The Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) means different  things to business owners. To banks, where the corporation bought over 13, 000 bad loans worth of N5.6 trillion, it is a restorer of hope. But, to recalcitrant debtors, whose bad loans were purchased, AMCON is a nightmare and a killer-pill. However, the corporation insists its mission is not to kill but to revive businesses  and make them irresistible to new investors, writes COLLINS NWEZE.

    With 13,000 businesses under its watch, the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) should trail the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) as one of the richest parastatals in the country.
    Ironically, as the NNPC swims in wealth, the AMCON, with over 13,000 accounts valued at N5.6 trillion consist mainly of moribund companies. The companies, waiting for elusive investors, have little or no prospect of survival.
    Some 400 obligors account for more than N4.5 trillion of AMCON’s N5.6 trillion loan profile (about 80 per cent of the corporation’s debt portfolio). Since its establishment in July 2010 to stablise the financial system by efficiently resolving the Non-Performing Loans (NPLs) assets of banks, AMCON has been on the hot seat. The companies under its watch accuse it of forcing killer-pills down their throats, or planning their total liquidation. AMCON’s Chief Executive Officer, Ahmed kuru, however dismissed the allegation as unfounded.
    The AMCON chief describes the corporation as one of the best things to happen to economy. To him, AMCON has not only stabilised the financial sector through its debt purchase scheme, it has offered fresh funds to rescuciate many of the ailing lenders.
    The takeover of the three bridged banks – Mainstreet, Enterprise and Keystone prevented the depositors from losing their savings. The corporation’s intervention saved thousands of jobs that would have been lost to the closure of the institutions. The AMCON has sold two of the banks to new managers and Keystone’s sale plan is ongoing. Kuru believes that the recovery of bad debts and revival of huge businesses under AMCON’s control will boost the local economy and create millions of jobs.
    Besides, a debtors’ list obtained from AMCON showed the top debtors as at December 2016, led by Rockson Engineering Company Limited with its N105 billion debt portfolio; Capital Oil-Gas Industries Limited (N102.4 billion); MRS Holdings Limited (N83.8 billion); Dansa Oil & Gas/Bulk Pack (N41 billion); Bi-Courtney Limited, (N35.5 billion); Home Trust Savings & Loans Limited (N27.2 billion) and National Clearing & Forwarding Agency (N20 billion).
    Others are: Roygate Properties (N24.6 billion); Suru Worldwide Ventures Limited (N25.8 billion); Tanzila Petroleum (N52 billion); Multi-Trex Investment Limited, (N3.8 billion) and Resort International Limited (N38.4 billion) among others.
    But many of the debtors have taken the corporation to court. Some are either contesting the figures or denying owing the corporation a penny.
    In an October 6, last year judgment delivered by the Federal High Court, Abuja between Capital Oil and Gas Industries Limited (plaintiff) and AMCON (defendant), the judge ordered the defendant to restructure the plaintiff’s debt.
    The court further orderd the defendant to provide N16 billion trade finance facility to revamp the business and pay plaintiff’s trade creditors. It further directed the defendant to pay additional N10.59 billion to the plaintiff for the payment of sundry creditors, who continue to threaten the plaintiff’s business.
    The management of MRS Holdings Limited also denied claims that it was owing AMCON. The management also refuted the claim on any ongoing plans to liquidate its operations.
    In a statement, the MRS management said: “Our attention has been drawn to a recent publication by the by the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria alleging that MRS Holdings Limited is indebted to it in the sum of N81 billion and that the Corporation has instituted Suit No: FHC/L/CP/923/2016 to wind up the company over the inability of MRS to pay the alleged debt”.
    Describing AMCON’s claims as false, the firm said: “MRS challenges in the strongest possible terms, the false claim by AMCON that MRS is indebted to AMCON in the sum of N81 billion or any sum at all. The correct position is that MRS obtained a loan from a consortium of banks in Nigeria for a viable project.”
    “AMCON has declared a new aggressive debt recovery drive. MRS has no problem with that but this does not give AMCON a licence to embarrass and harass companies. It is not a crime to obtain loans for viable projects. Execution of viable projects leads to job creation and growth of the economy. However, when companies that obtain loans for legitimate businesses are being harassed and embarrassed in the name of aggressive debt recovery, it signals danger for the growth of the economy”.
    According to the downstream oil firm, it had taken notice of AMCON’s frivolous recovery cases against many companies, which were dismissed by the courts.
    It said: “MRS is taking legal advice to clear its good name and bring necessary actions to seek damages for the embarrassment and damage caused the company’s reputation and goodwill by AMCON’s publication and action.
    “MRS further assures the general public that MRS Holdings Limited and its subsidiaries will continue to transact their businesses with the highest ethical standards and in accordance with the extant laws of the country,” it said.
    Efforts to contact MRS over the weekend, on its current debt status were unsuccessful as calls to the company’s official line were not answered.
    The Federal High Court, Lagos had earlier ordered Bi-Courtney Group of Companies and its owner, Dr. Wale Babalakin to hand-over its concessionary powers to AMCON with immediate effect. This follows the firm’s inability to pay a debt owed the asset managers. Besides, the court ordered Bi-Courtney’s account in banks to be frozen with immediate effect just as it ordered the banks to disclose all account balances to the asset managers.
    AMCON was also ordered to take over three other giant companies – Chartered Investment Limited, Resort International Limited and Roygate properties.
    The order, according to the court, took immediately effect in accordance with a concessionary agreement with the Federal Government. It also ordered AMCON to take over the Old Federal Secretariat building in Ikoyi, Lagos, belonging to Roygate Properties pursuant to a concessionary agreement between Roygate and the Federal Government.
    On these developments, Kuru noted that AMCON has never and will not run any business. But as facilitators, it encourages competent professionals to manage any of the businesses taken over by it. “We want debtors to come and talk to us on how they want to pay. We do not gain anything by embarrassing anybody”, Kuru said.
    On the continued posting of losses by the corporation, he said: “AMCON cannot make profits. It is not possible for AMCON to declare profits. We received about N160 billion annually from the Sinking Funds. The main objective of AMCON is to ensure it discharges its obligations at the end of its term”.
    The AMCON chief said it has so far recovered N644 billion in cash and assets from debtors, adding that it will continue to engage debtors to pay up their debts. It said 80 per cent of the bad loans it acquired from banks were beyond redemption. “Financial institutions have primary responsibilities to give out loans and more than 65 per cent of banks’ incomes are from interest and loans. All these facilities they have transferred to AMCON, 80 per cent of them are already inside the coffin. The only things that supports them, are the supporting assets,” it said.
    In an interview, AMCON’s Head, Corporate Communications, Jude Nwauzor, said that the AMCON has no interest in killing any business but to see it thriving. He listed Peugeot in Kaduna, Multi-Trex in Ogun State, the two oil rigs, tank farms, Tinapa Resort, are heavy investments in the books of AMCON.
    AMCON, he said, also has several real estate businesses and confirmed that the Federal Secretariat in Ikoyi was in its book.
    “These are massive investments. Look at Peugeot, when it was at its peak, it was assembling 90,000 vehicles monthly. A factory that does 90,000 vehicles cannot employ anything less than 5,000 workers. You can imagine the number of workforce and ripple effect of their earnings. AMCON stepped into a place like Peugeot to stop it from collapsing,” he said.
    According to him, with the investments the corporation is making and ample opportunities that this present administration and AMCON are exploring, one can imagine what can happen if Peugeot comes back in full stream.
    He said: “Right now, things are not what it should be. They have orders to supply cars but where are the funds. Although with the right investment, AMCON has stepped in to ensure the place is not run down. We want new investors to take over the business and it will start flying again. That is the type of impact that AMCON wants to see.
    “Imagine if Multi-Trex which is a cocoa processing company in Ogun State, is functioning, which when it was in full stream, had b etween 4,000 to 5,000 workers. Imagine if Tinapa Resort is functioning, the number of Nigerians that will be employed. You can imagine if Aero Contractors is in full flight and the number of workers that will be employed and what they will do to the economy. Imagine if Arik goes down and AMCON did not intervene,” he queried.
    He said the corporation had intervened in Arik, adding that the impact of Arik in the aviation industry cannot be over-emphasised.
    His words: “You can imagine if Afrijet is flying. That is why the AMCON chief always insists that Nigerians need to rally round AMCON for it to succeed because a lot of Nigerians do not understand that it is the taxpayers money that the people have borrowed and refused to pay back. It is you and I that keep our money in the banks and these borrowers go for the money and refuse to pay back,” he continued.
    He said that bad loans in the industry have made it difficult for more Nigerians to borrow. “People have borrowed money to set up poultries and those funds have ended up in property market in Dubai. A debtor is flying private jets, buying houses in Beverly Hills, and Union Bank where he took the money is suffering. We actually intervened in 22 banks in Nigeria, but the ones that were irredeemable were the ones that were bridged. There were other ones that AMCON bought over the bad loans and gave them fresh funds to do new businesses.
    “The AMCON had to bridge the banks, stabilise them for sale. The Federal Government had the option of liquidating those banks, but the depositors would lose their funds. But you can imagine what would have happened to the economy if AMCON was not created. Zimbabwe would have been like a paradise compared to Nigeria,” he said.
    Speaking on Peugeot takeover, he recalled that the company was doing 90,000 vehicles in the 80s but now, it is struggling to do 6,000 because of lack of proper investments. “Everything AMCON owns is for sale. At the right price, it is sold. But the state of the economy is making it difficult for us to sell. I don’t know how many Nigerians can raise the fund to buy Aero Contractors.